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Mild praise for Sri Lanka’s stability in a world marred by chaos and instability

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Turning Point USA: People Flee after Utah Shooting

The Economist has given something to the NPP to brag about in Colombo’s social circles. The journal’s latest number (September 6th) has a piece on Sri Lanka entitled, “Grace Period.” It is a characteristically objective piece but one that includes the acknowledgement that the first of Sri Lanka’s three cravings – “political stability, economic growth and national reconciliation” – is in place “at least for now.” The acknowledgement is significant when seen in light of the island’s years of turmoil and the current turmoil that is encircling practically every country in the world that The Economist picks for its weekly and always well informed comment.

The US leads everyone else in the chaos meter, perhaps only as a superpower could or rather should not. Many others are not too far behind. The Gaullist system in France, which Sri Lanka mistakenly chose to emulate, is yet again in trouble for want of a Prime Minister who can be acceptable to a deeply unpopular President and a hopelessly divided parliament. Across the channel, the British parliamentary system cannot quite help out the bumbling Labour Prime Minister, Sir Keir Starmer, who has somehow managed to burn up the massive electoral goodwill that he won before a year is even over. You can go from country to country, and you will see Nepal in your own front yard literally in flames.

Turning Point

The American turmoil has got another steroid boost after the public shooting and death last Wednesday of Charlie Kirk, 31 year old charismatic leader of a conservative youth movement called Turning Point USA. He was shot by a single bullet while answering questions at an open rally at Utah Valley University. Kirk founded Turning Point as a 19 year old school dropout – that may indicate the maturity of contemporary American conservatism, if not American politics itself.

Kirk tugged at the heartstrings of America’s youth, more males than females, by publicly challenging liberal elitism and asserting extreme conservative positions on every contentious question in America’s culture wars – from women’s role at home and in society to gun rights, to diversity, sexual orientations, conspiracy addictions and the 2020 election denial. He and his organization are strong supporters of Donald Trump and stalwarts of the Maga movement.

Kirk campaigned for Trump in all three of his presidential elections and was influential in mobilizing the winning youth vote for Trump in the 2024 election. The President was the first to formally announce in his official social media post, Kirk’s death after the young activist succumbed to injuries in hospital. He followed it up with a video podcast and has ordered the American flag to be lowered in all government buildings in the country and embassies abroad. You might see that on Galle Road in Colombo, but many may not know why.

A young life has been shot down again in America, and a young widow and her two young children are left to grieve. But the gun-crazy American society is not at all likely to look at the root causes of political violence or question the laissez-faire rights for carrying guns courtesy of the Second Amendment. True to form, Trump has railed against the ‘radical left’ for Kirk’s death and vowed to crack down on them, even though there is no indication yet as to who the killer is, and what his motivations are. On the other hand, Kirk himself may have unwittingly uttered his own epitaph in a widely publicized earlier quote: “I think it’s worth to have a cost of, unfortunately, some gun deaths every single year so that we can have the Second Amendment to protect our other God-given rights.” That is gun theology.

In other news, NATO has seized on the Russian drone forays into Poland’s airspace and got its big fighter jets to shoot down Russia’s reportedly Styrofoam drones. NATO seems ready to go on edge on the Russia front but is happy to be diplomatic in dealing with the virtually unstoppable Netanyahu in the Middle East. The Israeli Prime Minister is pounding Gaza nonstop, and has carried out an execution style attack on Hamas officials living in Qatar. Even Trump is not pleased with Netanyahu and is bemused by Russia’s drone flights into Poland.

War and Market

Underlying the many surface skirmishes are some big power pivots in world politics. Trump has renamed his Department of Defence as the Department of War (DOW), as it was known before World War II. But DOW’s current deployments are all in American cities run by Democrats. The western powers reduced to being reactive responders to Trump are touting defence investments as the new route to economic growth. “Defence is the engine for growth,” declared Luke Pollard the British Labour Minister for the Armed Forces, recently while awarding a contract to a European firm to build a new missile launcher plant in Bolton. The new British Labour view is resoundingly echoed across Europe, Australia and Canada.

At the other end, hosting the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) conference of the counter-powers in Tianjin, Chinese Leader Xi Jinping called on his guests to “leverage their mega-scale market” and to “uphold the international system with the United Nations at its core and support the multilateral trading system with the World Trade Organization at its core.” Tongue in cheek or not, China is reversing the West’s rhetoric as it tries to forge a counter alliance to the western bloc taking advantage of Trump’s humiliation of America’s western allies and his flouting of its own world order norms.

Remarkably, the Tianjin gathering included both India and Pakistan. No NATO or western leader could have got India’s Modi and Pakistan’s Sharif in the same room, let alone at the same table. Modi’s reason for attending the conference in China is Donald Trump and the 50% tariff he singled out India for imposing because India has been purchasing Russian crude oil at half the global prices disregarding US sanctions.

India felt betrayed and humiliated after already being made to feel insulted by Trump’s White House lunch with Pakistan’s military chief Field Marshal Asim Munir and his false boast that he forced peace between India and Pakistan. In one reckless move Trump has upended over two decades of American presidential efforts to cultivate India as an Asian counterweight to China.

Complicating the tariff chaos is the question of legality of Trump’s tariffs that is now headed to the American Supreme Court for resolution. Legal opinion is divided as to which way the Court, rather its six pro-Trump conservative judges, will sway. Even if two of them are convinced that Trump has overreached too far, that would be enough to forge a majority with the three liberal judges to uphold the lower court rulings that Trump’s reciprocal tariffs are illegal. On the other hand, the six judges could collectively persuade themselves that it is important, even if they have to hold their legal noses, to rule in Trumps’ favour if only to avoid the even greater chaos of undoing the mess that their president has already created.

In Brazil, a panel of Supreme Court judges have convicted their former president Jair Bolsonaro and sentenced him to 27 years and three months in prison on charges of conspiracy to remain in power after losing the 2022 presidential election. Perhaps the US Supreme Court judges should take a leaf from their Brazilian brothers. Twenty years ago, the expectations would have been the other way around.

After escaping judicial strictures in his country, Trump is now berating the Brazilian government and its Supreme Court for conducting a witch hunt against his soulmate Bolsonaro. For that he punished Brazil with a 50% tariff (same as on India) and sanctioned Justice Alexandre de Moraes, the lead Judge on the panel. The US Secretary of State Marco Rubio, a Cuban American, has vowed to “respond accordingly to this witch hunt.” What is also common to the two countries is that the two polities are deeply divided – US over Trump, and Brazil over Bolsonaro.

Small and Stable

Amidst the encircling chaos, it is remarkable that Sri Lanka is showing political stability and it is in order that the NPP government gets some credit for it. Political stability is a necessary and useful backdrop to realizing Sri Lanka’s other two cravings: economic stability and national reconciliation. At the same time, political stability cannot be sustained if economic stability is not systematically achieved. Without progress on the economic front, even the government’s own electoral stability will be put at risk. Increments in national reconciliation may not bring matching electoral rewards, but without them the NPP will lose its pretext for claiming moral superiority over the political rumps from yesteryear.

Within three years from now Sri Lanka’s debt payments will start and the current complacency over foreign reserves will be seriously challenged. The government’s challenge is to make serious advances, before 2028, in fighting poverty (now close 25% are below the poverty line of Rs. 1,096 per day) and malnutrition among children (currently afflicting 17% of children under five). Maintaining essential food supplies will be critical to eliminating malnutrition and reducing poverty.

The government should pre-emptively avoid inter-seasonal rice shortages simply by allowing imports to offset short supplies. Trying to solve shortages through mastering data and imposing regulations will not work. When it comes to rice, good politics would be to provide for flexible imports, and not insist on regulations and restrictions. Ensuring a steady supply of rice could even force hoarders to enter the market and not manipulate it.

The more difficult challenge would be to find new avenues for growth in addition to the established exports, tourism and remittances. The current exports will have to be protected from Trump’s tariffs even as the government looks for new exports. They cannot be identified and established in a jiffy. Tourism in Sri Lanka began after 1965 and it has taken 60 years to see three million visits as an achievable target. Garments have been around for half the time, still the industry has not been able to reduce its factor imports.

On national reconciliation, the government will have to make up its mind where to begin. The resurrection of mass graves presents both problems and opportunities. The government should not end up losing opportunities by trying to avoid problems. The government has been allocating funds and ensuring independent judicial oversight for mass grave investigations. It should start thinking of and planning the next steps that should invariably involve identifying and engaging with those responsible for the mass graves.

If the government was thinking of an exclusively development road map for national reconciliation, it has got a new reminder from India about the 13th Amendment. But the two are not mutually exclusive, and it would make sense to marry development and devolution. That brings up the politically hot question of provincial council elections and their timing. The government should not wait for the auspicious time when it can win election to all the provincial councils at the same time. Rather it should have the confidence to work with a provincial council, or councils, where another party has got the majority.

by Rajan Philips ✍️



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Features

Sustaining good governance requires good systems

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A prominent feature of the first year of the NPP government is that it has not engaged in the institutional reforms which was expected of it. This observation comes in the context of the extraordinary mandate with which the government was elected and the high expectations that accompanied its rise to power. When in opposition and in its election manifesto, the JVP and NPP took a prominent role in advocating good governance systems for the country. They insisted on constitutional reform that included the abolition of the executive presidency and the concentration of power it epitomises, the strengthening of independent institutions that overlook key state institutions such as the judiciary, public service and police, and the reform or repeal of repressive laws such as the PTA and the Online Safety Act.

The transformation of a political party that averaged between three to five percent of the popular vote into one that currently forms the government with a two thirds majority in parliament is a testament to the faith that the general population placed in the JVP/ NPP combine. This faith was the outcome of more than three decades of disciplined conduct in the aftermath of the bitter experience of the 1988 to 1990 period of JVP insurrection. The manner in which the handful of JVP parliamentarians engaged in debate with well researched critiques of government policy and actions, and their service in times of disaster such as the tsunami of 2004 won them the trust of the people. This faith was bolstered by the Aragalaya movement which galvanized the citizens against the ruling elites of the past.

In this context, the long delay to repeal the Prevention of Terrorism Act which has earned notoriety for its abuse especially against ethnic and religious minorities, has been a disappointment to those who value human rights. So has been the delay in appointing an Auditor General, so important in ensuring accountability for the money expended by the state. The PTA has a long history of being used without restraint against those deemed to be anti-state which, ironically enough, included the JVP in the period 1988 to 1990. The draft Protection of the State from Terrorism Act (PSTA), published in December 2025, is the latest attempt to repeal and replace the PTA. Unfortunately, the PSTA largely replicates the structure, logic and dangers of previous failed counter terrorism bills, including the Counter Terrorism Act of 2018 and the Anti Terrorism Act proposed in 2023.

Misguided Assumption

Despite its stated commitment to rule of law and fundamental rights, the draft PTSA reproduces many of the core defects of the PTA. In a preliminary statement, the Centre for Policy Alternatives has observed among other things that “if there is a Detention Order made against the person, then in combination, the period of remand and detention can extend up to two years. This means that a person can languish in detention for up to two years without being charged with a crime. Such a long period again raises questions of the power of the State to target individuals, exacerbated by Sri Lanka’s history of long periods of remand and detention, which has contributed to abuse and violence.” Human Rights lawyer Ermiza Tegal has warned against the broad definition of terrorism under the proposed law: “The definition empowers state officials to term acts of dissent and civil disobedience as ‘terrorism’ and will lawfully permit disproportionate and excessive responses.”  The legitimate and peaceful protests against abuse of power by the authorities cannot be classified as acts of terror.

The willingness to retain such powers reflects the surmise that the government feels that keeping in place the structures that come from the past is to their benefit, as they can utilise those powers in a crisis. Due to the strict discipline that exists within the JVP/NPP at this time there may be an assumption that those the party appoints will not abuse their trust. However, the country’s experience with draconian laws designed for exceptional circumstances demonstrates that they tend to become tools of routine governance. On the plus side, the government has given two months for public comment which will become meaningful if the inputs from civil society actors are taken into consideration.

Worldwide experience has repeatedly demonstrated that integrity at the level of individual leaders, while necessary, is not sufficient to guarantee good governance over time. This is where the absence of institutional reform becomes significant. The aftermath of Cyclone Ditwah in particular has necessitated massive procurements of emergency relief which have to be disbursed at maximum speed. There are also significant amounts of foreign aid flowing into the country to help it deal with the relief and recovery phase. There are protocols in place that need to be followed and monitored so that a fiasco like the disappearance of tsunami aid in 2004 does not recur. To the government’s credit there are no such allegations at the present time. But precautions need to be in place, and those precautions depend less on trust in individuals than on the strength and independence of oversight institutions.

Inappropriate Appointments

It is in this context that the government’s efforts to appoint its own preferred nominees to the Auditor General’s Department has also come as a disappointment to civil society groups. The unsuitability of the latest presidential nominee has given rise to the surmise that this nomination was a time buying exercise to make an acting appointment. For the fourth time, the Constitutional Council refused to accept the president’s nominee. The term of the three independent civil society members of the Constitutional Council ends in January which would give the government the opportunity to appoint three new members of its choice and get its way in the future.

The failure to appoint a permanent Auditor General has created an institutional vacuum at a critical moment. The Auditor General acts as a watchdog, ensuring effective service delivery promoting integrity in public administration and providing an independent review of the performance and accountability. Transparency International has observed “The sequence of events following the retirement of the previous Auditor General points to a broader political inertia and a governance failure. Despite the clear constitutional importance of the role, the appointment process has remained protracted and opaque, raising serious questions about political will and commitment to accountability.”

It would appear that the government leadership takes the position they have been given the mandate to govern the country which requires implementation by those they have confidence in. This may explain their approach to the appointment (or non-appointment) at this time of the Auditor General. Yet this approach carries risks. Institutions are designed to function beyond the lifespan of any one government and to protect the public interest even when those in power are tempted to act otherwise. The challenge and opportunity for the NPP government is to safeguard independent institutions and enact just laws, so that the promise of system change endures beyond personalities and political cycles.

by Jehan Perera

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General education reforms: What about language and ethnicity?

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A new batch arrived at our Faculty again. Students representing almost all districts of the country remind me once again of the wonderful opportunity we have for promoting social and ethnic cohesion at our universities. Sadly, however, many students do not interact with each other during the first few semesters, not only because they do not speak each other’s language(s), but also because of the fear and distrust that still prevails among communities in our society.

General education reform presents an opportunity to explore ways to promote social and ethnic cohesion. A school curriculum could foster shared values, empathy, and critical thinking, through social studies and civics education, implement inclusive language policies, and raise critical awareness about our collective histories. Yet, the government’s new policy document, Transforming General Education in Sri Lanka 2025, leaves us little to look forward to in this regard.

The policy document points to several “salient” features within it, including: 1) a school credit system to quantify learning; 2) module-based formative and summative assessments to replace end-of-term tests; 3) skills assessment in Grade 9 consisting of a ‘literacy and numeracy test’ and a ‘career interest test’; 4) a comprehensive GPA-based reporting system spanning the various phases of education; 5) blended learning that combines online with classroom teaching; 6) learning units to guide students to select their preferred career pathways; 7) technology modules; 8) innovation labs; and 9) Early Childhood Education (ECE). Notably, social and ethnic cohesion does not appear in this list. Here, I explore how the proposed curriculum reforms align (or do not align) with the NPP’s pledge to inculcate “[s]afety, mutual understanding, trust and rights of all ethnicities and religious groups” (p.127), in their 2024 Election Manifesto.

Language/ethnicity in the present curriculum

The civil war ended over 15 years ago, but our general education system has done little to bring ethnic communities together. In fact, most students still cannot speak in the “second national language” (SNL) and textbooks continue to reinforce negative stereotyping of ethnic minorities, while leaving out crucial elements of our post-independence history.

Although SNL has been a compulsory subject since the 1990s, the hours dedicated to SNL are few, curricula poorly developed, and trained teachers few (Perera, 2025). Perhaps due to unconscious bias and for ideological reasons, SNL is not valued by parents and school communities more broadly. Most students, who enter our Faculty, only have basic reading/writing skills in SNL, apart from the few Muslim and Tamil students who schooled outside the North and the East; they pick up SNL by virtue of their environment, not the school curriculum.

Regardless of ethnic background, most undergraduates seem to be ignorant about crucial aspects of our country’s history of ethnic conflict. The Grade 11 history textbook, which contains the only chapter on the post-independence period, does not mention the civil war or the events that led up to it. While the textbook valourises ‘Sinhala Only’ as an anti-colonial policy (p.11), the material covering the period thereafter fails to mention the anti-Tamil riots, rise of rebel groups, escalation of civil war, and JVP insurrections. The words “Tamil” and “Muslim” appear most frequently in the chapter, ‘National Renaissance,’ which cursorily mentions “Sinhalese-Muslim riots” vis-à-vis the Temperance Movement (p.57). The disenfranchisement of the Malaiyaha Tamils and their history are completely left out.

Given the horrifying experiences of war and exclusion experienced by many of our peoples since independence, and because most students still learn in mono-ethnic schools having little interaction with the ‘Other’, it is not surprising that our undergraduates find it difficult to mix across language and ethnic communities. This environment also creates fertile ground for polarizing discourses that further divide and segregate students once they enter university.

More of the same?

How does Transforming General Education seek to address these problems? The introduction begins on a positive note: “The proposed reforms will create citizens with a critical consciousness who will respect and appreciate the diversity they see around them, along the lines of ethnicity, religion, gender, disability, and other areas of difference” (p.1). Although National Education Goal no. 8 somewhat problematically aims to “Develop a patriotic Sri Lankan citizen fostering national cohesion, national integrity, and national unity while respecting cultural diversity (p. 2), the curriculum reforms aim to embed values of “equity, inclusivity, and social justice” (p. 9) through education. Such buzzwords appear through the introduction, but are not reflected in the reforms.

Learning SNL is promoted under Language and Literacy (Learning Area no. 1) as “a critical means of reconciliation and co-existence”, but the number of hours assigned to SNL are minimal. For instance, at primary level (Grades 1 to 5), only 0.3 to 1 hour is allocated to SNL per week. Meanwhile, at junior secondary level (Grades 6 to 9), out of 35 credits (30 credits across 15 essential subjects that include SNL, history and civics; 3 credits of further learning modules; and 2 credits of transversal skills modules (p. 13, pp.18-19), SNL receives 1 credit (10 hours) per term. Like other essential subjects, SNL is to be assessed through formative and summative assessments within modules. As details of the Grade 9 skills assessment are not provided in the document, it is unclear whether SNL assessments will be included in the ‘Literacy and numeracy test’. At senior secondary level – phase 1 (Grades 10-11 – O/L equivalent), SNL is listed as an elective.

Refreshingly, the policy document does acknowledge the detrimental effects of funding cuts in the humanities and social sciences, and highlights their importance for creating knowledge that could help to “eradicate socioeconomic divisions and inequalities” (p.5-6). It goes on to point to the salience of the Humanities and Social Sciences Education under Learning Area no. 6 (p.12):

“Humanities and Social Sciences education is vital for students to develop as well as critique various forms of identities so that they have an awareness of their role in their immediate communities and nation. Such awareness will allow them to contribute towards the strengthening of democracy and intercommunal dialogue, which is necessary for peace and reconciliation. Furthermore, a strong grounding in the Humanities and Social Sciences will lead to equity and social justice concerning caste, disability, gender, and other features of social stratification.”

Sadly, the seemingly progressive philosophy guiding has not moulded the new curriculum. Subjects that could potentially address social/ethnic cohesion, such as environmental studies, history and civics, are not listed as learning areas at the primary level. History is allocated 20 hours (2 credits) across four years at junior secondary level (Grades 6 to 9), while only 10 hours (1 credit) are allocated to civics. Meanwhile, at the O/L, students will learn 5 compulsory subjects (Mother Tongue, English, Mathematics, Science, and Religion and Value Education), and 2 electives—SNL, history and civics are bunched together with the likes of entrepreneurship here. Unlike the compulsory subjects, which are allocated 140 hours (14 credits or 70 hours each) across two years, those who opt for history or civics as electives would only have 20 hours (2 credits) of learning in each. A further 14 credits per term are for further learning modules, which will allow students to explore their interests before committing to a A/L stream or career path.

With the distribution of credits across a large number of subjects, and the few credits available for SNL, history and civics, social/ethnic cohesion will likely remain on the back burner. It appears to be neglected at primary level, is dealt sparingly at junior secondary level, and relegated to electives in senior years. This means that students will be able to progress through their entire school years, like we did, with very basic competencies in SNL and little understanding of history.

Going forward

Whether the students who experience this curriculum will be able to “resist and respond to hegemonic, divisive forces that pose a threat to social harmony and multicultural coexistence” (p.9) as anticipated in the policy, is questionable. Education policymakers and others must call for more attention to social and ethnic cohesion in the curriculum. However, changes to the curriculum would only be meaningful if accompanied by constitutional reform, abolition of policies, such as the Prevention of Terrorism Act (and its proxies), and other political changes.

For now, our school system remains divided by ethnicity and religion. Research from conflict-ridden societies suggests that lack of intercultural exposure in mono-ethnic schools leads to ignorance, prejudice, and polarized positions on politics and national identity. While such problems must be addressed in broader education reform efforts that also safeguard minority identities, the new curriculum revision presents an opportune moment to move this agenda forward.

(Ramya Kumar is attached to the Department of Community and Family Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Jaffna).

Kuppi is a politics and pedagogy happening on the margins of the lecture hall that parodies, subverts, and simultaneously reaffirms social hierarchies.

by Ramya Kumar

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Features

Top 10 Most Popular Festive Songs

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Certain songs become ever-present every December, and with Christmas just two days away, I thought of highlighting the Top 10 Most Popular Festive Songs.

The famous festive songs usually feature timeless classics like ‘White Christmas,’ ‘Silent Night,’ and ‘Jingle Bells,’ alongside modern staples like Mariah Carey’s ‘All I Want for Christmas Is You,’ Wham’s ‘Last Christmas,’ and Brenda Lee’s ‘Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree.’

The following renowned Christmas songs are celebrated for their lasting impact and festive spirit:

*  ‘White Christmas’ — Bing Crosby

The most famous holiday song ever recorded, with estimated worldwide sales exceeding 50 million copies. It remains the best-selling single of all time.

*  ‘All I Want for Christmas Is You’ — Mariah Carey

A modern anthem that dominates global charts every December. As of late 2025, it holds an 18x Platinum certification in the US and is often ranked as the No. 1 popular holiday track.

Mariah Carey: ‘All I Want for Christmas Is You’

*  ‘Silent Night’ — Traditional

Widely considered the quintessential Christmas carol, it is valued for its peaceful melody and has been recorded by hundreds of artistes, most famously by Bing Crosby.

*  ‘Jingle Bells’ — Traditional

One of the most universally recognised and widely sung songs globally, making it a staple for children and festive gatherings.

*  ‘Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree’ — Brenda Lee

Recorded when Lee was just 13, this rock ‘n’ roll favourite has seen a massive resurgence in the 2020s, often rivaling Mariah Carey for the top spot on the Billboard Hot 100.

*  ‘Last Christmas’ — Wham!

A bittersweet ’80s pop classic that has spent decades in the top 10 during the holiday season. It recently achieved 7x Platinum status in the UK.

*  ‘Jingle Bell Rock’ — Bobby Helms

A festive rockabilly standard released in 1957 that remains a staple of holiday radio and playlists.

*  ‘The Christmas Song (Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire)’— Nat King Cole

Known for its smooth, warm vocals, this track is frequently cited as the ultimate Christmas jazz standard.

Wham! ‘Last Christmas’

*  ‘It’s the Most Wonderful Time of the Year’ — Andy Williams

Released in 1963, this high-energy big band track is famous for capturing the “hectic merriment” of the season.

*  ‘Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer’ — Gene Autry

A beloved narrative song that has sold approximately 25 million copies worldwide, cementing the character’s place in Christmas folklore.

Other perennial favourites often in the mix:

*  ‘Feliz Navidad’ – José Feliciano

*  ‘A Holly Jolly Christmas’ – Burl Ives

*  ‘Let It Snow! Let It Snow! Let It Snow!’ – Frank Sinatra

Let me also add that this Thursday’s ‘SceneAround’ feature (25th December) will be a Christmas edition, highlighting special Christmas and New Year messages put together by well-known personalities for readers of The Island.

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